Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Memento

With this project we were required to create a piece that would serve as a memento or keepsake representing a particular memory, person, or event. For my piece I chose to make my memento based on a couple of memories that, although seemingly insignificant, often come to my memory when I pass certain landmarks, hear a certain song, or even smell a familiar scent. I find it so interesting that memories often come back to us at random moments, without warning. With my piece I wanted to capture some of these moments so that I could continue remembering them, and hopefully hold onto some of the insignificant times that I would usually forget.

The memories that I chose all stem from driving in the car with my older sister. My sister is one of my favorite people and someone that I have always admired and looked up to, so naturally I cherish many of the experiences that I have shared with her. One thing that we have shared a lot of memories doing is driving. Ever since my sister got her license she has been picking me up from school, driving me to soccer practice, friends' houses, church, the mall, the beach, and running errands with me. My sister also loves music, so most of the time she was driving me places, we would be listening to music. These two ordinary things (driving and listening to music with my sister) have created some of my most beloved memories, and have even come to define a lot of my sister and my relationship. My memento works to embody and represent this relationship and some of the memories I have with my sister. 

Process Pictures:


To begin, I chose to create a glass box to represent the windows and being inside of my sister's car. This structure creates the framework of the rest of the memories. Rather than making a structure that actually resembled a car, or windows or even my sister, I wanted my piece to consist of basic shapes to represent the mundane and ordinary nature of these memories.

After I created the box I placed three basic glass shapes in the box, filled it with sparkling water and sealed the structure closed. The three shapes are two long rectangular prisms and one flat larger rectangle. The larger shape represents a billboard that I remember seeing while my sister and I were stopped at a traffic light while we shared a discussion about a boy that I had a crush on at the time. One of the prisms represents a wooden pillar that I tried to climb once when we drove to the beach randomly one night. The other prism represents one of the pillars holding a bridge that I remember we were stopped under while we tried to find our way home after we had gotten lost trying to get to an art store. I chose to make these shapes out of the same clear material that the box was made out of because of the way that the memories are not solid memories in my mind that I can always recall and bring to my memory, but rather they are transparent in that I remember them at random times, and I usually do not recall all of the details of the memories, as if they were a dream. To make them even harder to see and to give them more natural movement, I filled the box with sparkling water. The water is significant because it represents a number of things. It represents the memories I have with my sister at the beach, the movement of the music, and as I explained, it gives all the pieces the kind of movement that I feel the memories themselves actually have. Another funny thing about the water is that when I went to buy the bottle for this project they were selling the waters with labels designed by Andy Warhol, who happens to be one of my sister's favorite artists- so even the water provides a memento of my sister!

Final Pictures:





Drawings:




Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Masked Identity

With this assignment I was inspired by words. As humans we communicate most everything through verbal language, and that is often the only form of communication that we can rely on for a picture of a person's identity. Because I am naturally an introvert and I do not enjoy speaking most of the time, I feel that I have an interesting relationship with words, and I have my whole life. I grew up in a home with a lot of verbal abuse, so I also know that words have power and the way that they are used is very important. To focus this idea I found my inspiration from the saying, "from the mouth the heart speaks."

I wanted my mask to cover the shoulders and most of the chest to give the visual that the heart plays an important role in communication. From there my mask covers the face and extends out in a phonograph shape, also representing the communication of verbal words. To push this idea further, I had the phonograph-type shape recede back in, but I left the metal wire exposed on the inside. The wire is patterned similarly to a spider web, but it is hard and rigid because of the material it is made with. With our words we often spin webs and can hurt others and trap ourselves, and this is what this structure represents. Also through the indent back into the structure, I wanted to express the way that we choose not to speak at times, or recede back from our words, and yet we still have harsh and hurtful words going through our minds behind the scenes. I know I can't speak for all people, but I will often plan out a confrontation or a conversation, but once I see that person and begin to talk to them, I draw back in and end up saying nothing at all.

I have a very complex relationship with words in that I struggle expressing myself through language, and yet I often find that the times I do speak, I end up only expressing my negative feeling and hurtful words. That is also a reason that I dance. Through dance I can express all of my feelings, without words. This is why I chose to take my pictures in the aerial silk- it is part of my identity, and I often use it as a covering and a way to avoid verbal communication. There are so many complex feelings and thoughts that went into this project that I am not actually sure I can communicate effectively through words (which is the very reason this project has meaning to me), but my hope is that my mask will communicate these ideas beyond what words can.

Process Pictures:






Final Photos:

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Paper Stacking

Process Pictures:








Paper Stacking From Life Final Pictures:








For my paper stacked fruit I began by observing my apple and then tracing the basic shape of it and cutting out the rest of the pieces based on those shapes. After I finished the rough shape of the apple, I sanded it down to finish it.

Inspiration for created piece:

I was inspired by the following ballet and the way that the dancers movement resembled breathing and the heart beat. With my piece I wanted to embody this movement and create a piece that would have a breath of its own. I stacked a series of triangles and glued them in a specific sequence in order to make the form move on its own and create interesting negative space.





Invented Paper Stacking Piece Final Pictures:












Drawings:

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Gregor's Room

Vocabulary list from my reading of The Metamorphosis: 

dissipate- to cause to spread thin or scatter and gradually vanish.
arbitrary- not planned or chosen for a particular reason; not based on reason or evidence; done without concern for what is fair or right.
diminutive- very small
admonitions- a criticism or warning about behavior. 
shoddy- Inferior, imitative, or pretentious articles or matter. Pretentious vulgarity. 

My response to The Metamorphosis:
I love this story. The most interesting part of this story to me is the relationship between father and son. To me, I saw the father as having a hold on Gregor, which led me to create the bed as a symbol of the father- the head board representing the fingers of the father coming down and holding onto Gregor, trapping him in his bed. I felt that Gregor's transformation into a dung beetle was brought on by his father's business failure and his constant disappointment in Gregor. I also thought that Gregor's military background was an important element of the story because it made Gregor's life as a traveling salesman all the more discouraging and disappointing. As a lieutenant in the military, I can only imagine how humiliating it must have been for Gregor to come home from the war only to work in such a demanding and belittling job as a salesman. I included his military hat in a box representing Gregor's past, along with sales documents and cigarettes. Also to tie in the relationship between father and son, I added Gregor's dad's shiny, gold buttons to Gregor's wings to leave the mark of the father on Gregor's transformed state. The buttons also make Gregor seem somewhat human like- I purposely formed his wings like coat tails and included the buttons to show that he was still a human in a bug's body. I think Kafka's bizarre story is a tremendous insight on family relationships, personal pride, and the truth that we become what we perceive ourselves to be. 

In Process Photographs:









Final Project:































Drawings: